Select Local Merchants

At Lokal's, the kitchen staff bakes its wings twice before serving them with a choice of 18 sauces, including mild, spicy, or extra hot. The wings complement the rest of the restaurant's sports-bar menu of burgers, sandwiches, and wraps.

Claiming a slew of awards, including Best Chicken Dinner by the Orange County Register, El Pollo Loco fills stomachs on the go with a menu of flavorful poultry inspired by Mexico's kitchens. Enjoy the rich tastes of a four-piece combo—including breasts and wings marinated in herbs, spices, and citrus juices—entouraged by two sides from an expansive selection, including spanish rice, BBQ black beans, corn cobbettes, and mac 'n' cheese ($8.99). For a more portable lunch during parkour breaks from the office, wrap your chicken in the warm tortilla blanket of a twice-grilled burrito ($5.99). El Pollo Loco's innovative salsa bar tickles tongues with fresh varieties of avocado, chipotle, and pico de gallo.

A waterfall cascades over a towering cliff. A few acres away, hundreds of thousands of tulips sway in the desert breeze where hay and barley once grew. Originally a dairy farm, the 55-acre Thanksgiving Point has bloomed into a museum complex and attraction with one-of-a-kind experiences, shopping, dining, and seasonal festivals. In Thanksgiving Point Gardens, trees and shrubs form divisions between 15 themed gardens modeled after a country estate, 13 acres of turf grass, and a 4,000-seat amphitheater beside a manmade waterfall—all of which flourish under the hands of 26 gardeners. Gardeners feed their plots using an intricate water-reclamation system, which harvests millions of gallons of runoff water and lizards' tears annually to transform the desert landscape into an assembly of global ecosystems.
The outdoor park is also home to Farm Country, a working farm where goats, pigs, and draft horses mingle with peacocks and wildlife photographers disguised as ostriches. Visitors delve into farm culture as they pet and feed the animals, ride ponies, and look in on the process of bottling milk. The Museum of Ancient Life explores life long before agriculture, exhibiting 60 complete dinosaur skeletons to a soundtrack of gurgling steams, insect chirps, and one jazz saxophonist. The museum also contains more than 50 interactive exhibits, including a simulated fossil dig.

Located at the official landmark for Famous Porter Rockwell, Porter's Place offers homestyle food with a dose of history. Guests can sip a sarsaparilla, feast on barbecue buffalo bits, or finish off a 20-ounce porterhouse as they learn about Mormon pioneer Orrin Porter Rockwell. While the history of the man understandably snags most of the focus, the building itself has quite a past. It was built in 1915 and was originally heated by two coal and wood stoves and lots of wishful thinking. It includes a bar that dates back to 1881, a beehive clock built for the 1912 opening of Hotel Utah, and fresh food that has barely any history at all.

Enjoy a freshly tossed pizza loaded with toppings at Domino's Pizza in Lehi.
This place will leave you feeling satisfied no matter what kind of dietary needs you have.
Between the music and the crowds, Domino's Pizza's noise levels can be intense.
For the nights you just want to stay in and cozy up, order in great takeout or delivery from Domino's Pizza.
Store your bike at one of the many racks outside of Domino's Pizza.
You'll find your bill at Domino's Pizza to be more than reasonable, with most meals costing less than $15.

There's no such thing as a pizza that's ready too soon. That's why Tenney's Pizza keeps ready-to-go pies on hand every day after 4 p.m. Of course, waiting has its own merits, such as fully customized pizzas topped with your choice of 12 ingredients, including everything from peppers to pineapple slices. Other options include gluten-free crusts and seven specialty pies topped with the likes of nacho cheese or spinach and white-cheddar alfredo.